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cross-posted from: https://slrpnk.net/post/19515148

Archived version

The Chinese fast-fashion brand Shein has spent more than a year working on a plan to list its shares on the London Stock Exchange, and successive British governments have tried to help.

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Yet this business deal could have huge ramifications that stretch far beyond the Square Mile.

That’s not just because of the many accusations that have dogged Shein for years – including forced labour in its supply chain, environmental recklessness, and tax-loophole exploitation at the expense of traditional retailers.

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Jeremy Hunt did his best to reel in Shein in his final months as chancellor last year, and his successor [Rachel Reeves] has continued those efforts. Having proclaimed that economic growth is the “number-one mission” of her Government, Reeves wants to demonstrate to China that the UK is open for its business.

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Shein and claims of forced labour

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An undercover investigation by Channel 4 in 2022 found that labourers making Shein’s clothes in contractors’ factories were often working up to 18 hours a day, and being paid as little as 3p per item, with no weekends and only one day off per month.

The revelations led some influencers to refuse any further work with Shein, and the Rolling Stones cancelled a licensing deal with the brand after The i Paper alerted them to the scandal.

The company vowed to invest millions to improve standards after confirming that some suppliers were abusing workers. But last year another investigation by the Swiss campaign group PublicEye concluded that “illegal working hours” were still common for many workers in Guangzhou. Shein said it takes “firm action” if suppliers break local laws.

Just last week it admitted that audits had uncovered two cases of child labour in supplier factories. Shein terminated contracts with the firms involved immediately, saying it would “work tirelessly to ensure that these isolated cases are removed from our supply chain entirely in future”.

The UK’s Independent Anti-Slavery Commissioner, Eleanor Lyons, warned last year: “Encouraging a company like Shein to float on the UK market inadvertently implies endorsement of poor labour practices.” Human rights campaigners fear that we could all become complicit if UK pension funds buy shares in the company.

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In January, a senior Shein lawyer repeatedly refused to tell the Commons Business Committee whether its products contain cotton from Xinjiang. She also failed to answer questions about the flotation, leaving committee chairman Liam Byrne “pretty horrified by the lack of evidence” presented to MPs by the firm.

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Shein has been laying the ground carefully in London. It has employed Global Counsel, the lobbying firm owned by Lord Mandelson – now British ambassador to the US – to approach ministers on its behalf. Another lobbyist – Kamella Hudson of FGS Global – accompanied Shein executive chairman Donald Tang to meetings with Labour ministers last year, just months after she assisted Reeves during last summer’s election campaign, according to Bloomberg.

However, revelations about this private courtship have increased the sense of alarm among Labour backbenchers. They have joined the likes of former Tory leader Iain Duncan Smith and ex-security minister Tom Tugendhat warning against the flotation, with the latter previously calling the retailer “a sinister cross between surveillance and capitalism”.

Labour MP Rachael Maskell, who served as shadow employment secretary under Jeremy Corbyn, became concerned about Shein after one of her constituents – a painter who runs a small stationary firm in York – complained it had copied one of her designs, a copyright breach costing £100,000.

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Blair McDougall, the Labour MP who chairs the all-party parliamentary groups on both Hong Kong and Uyghurs, agrees. “Nobody can have any confidence that this is a company whose products are free from slave labour,” he says. “The City of London cannot be a soft touch for unethical companies.”

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Asked about the Chancellor’s apparent support for a London listing, Maskell says ministers “should think again, because it will undermine businesses on all sorts of fronts”. She said it would be a step towards the UK becoming a “bargain-basement economy,” which Starmer himself warned against in 2017.

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Shein hoped to go public in London by Easter, but that is expected to be postponed until the second half of the year after a troubling few months for the company.

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“Investors who have a keen eye on environmental, social and governance issues will be nervous and less inclined to invest in Shein,” says Susannah Streeter [head of money and markets at investment platform Hargreaves Lansdown], calling the company a “laggard” on these issues compared to rivals.

Then again, “listing in London may force it to clean up its act,” she says. “There will be a spotlight trained on it, and Shein appears to have already taken some steps to ensure its supply chain is more transparent.”

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submitted 5 months ago* (last edited 5 months ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/31001120

Archived

On the morning of March 10, the container ship Solong collided with an American tanker in the North Sea. British police subsequently arrested the 59-year-old captain of the Solong, whose name has not yet been disclosed. However, a Reuters report indicates that the captain is a Russian citizen.

The Solong, owned by the Hamburg-based international shipping company Ernst Russ, struck the anchored U.S. tanker Stena Immaculate, which was carrying jet fuel for the U.S. military. The impact caused fires to break out on both vessels, and as of March 12, the flames had not been fully extinguished. The crews were evacuated, but one Solong crew member remains missing. The captain is suspected of involuntary manslaughter due to negligence, as the missing crew member is presumed to have died as a result of the incident.

According to AIS (Automatic Identification System) tracking data, Solong was approaching Stena Immaculate at a speed of 16 knots (approximately 30 km/h) and made no visible attempts to avoid the collision. An American sailor aboard the tanker told CBS News that the container ship appeared “out of the blue.”

Initial reports following the accident suggested that Solong was carrying 15 containers of toxic sodium cyanide. However, Ernst Russ later denied this, stating: “There are four empty containers on board that previously held hazardous chemicals,” according to a statement obtained by The Insider.

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Failing to redress the issues facing young men will push them further towards the far right

in several areas there is now a reverse gender gap, with boys, particularly those from poorer backgrounds, struggling to keep up with girls

Do you think this is an important issue?

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Today the UK Government has announced plans to open up the Land Registry – which, if delivered, will finally reveal more about who owns land in England and Wales.
[…]
Currently, it costs £7 to view a single land title register, and with 24m land titles registered, it would cost a member of the public £168m to find out who owns all of England and Wales. If the Government’s shift in policy towards the Land Registry is enacted, this should result in search fees dropping to zero – though it would require a Minister to table secondary legislation in Parliament to do so. Search fees comprise just 5.3% of the Land Registry’s income, with the vast majority of their revenues coming from conveyancing costs from people buying homes.

Maps of who owns land in England are even harder to access currently. Since 2017, the Land Registry has published large datasets listing the land and property owned by UK and overseas companies, but hasn’t released accompanying maps. In future, if the datasets were published with unique geographical identifiers for each address, called INSPIRE IDs, it would allow campaigners to map them – thereby revealing, for example, if developers are land banking.

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Clifford was found guilty of raping his ex-partner Louise before murdering her and her family at Cambridge Crown Court on Thursday.

The 26-year-old former soldier became "enraged" when his Louise ended their 18-month relationship - which led to him plotting the "carefully planned and executed" killings on July 9 last year.

Clifford gained access to the family home by deceiving 61-year-old Carol Hunt, the wife of BBC racing commentator John Hunt, before stabbing her to death in a "brutal knife attack".

After killing Mrs Hunt, the defendant then "lay in wait" for an hour for Louise to enter the house, before restraining, raping and ultimately murdering her with a crossbow.

He then fatally shot 28-year-old Hannah Hunt when she returned to the property in the quiet cul-de-sac of Ashlyn Close in Bushey, Hertfordshire, after work.

Less than 24 hours before the murders, Clifford had searched for Andrew Tate's podcast, with prosecutor Alison Morgan KC telling the court: "It's misogynistic, trying to control Louise Hunt in the context of a final act of spite. You can see how the mind was working."

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cross-posted from: https://slrpnk.net/post/19172804

Four former British ambassadors to the United States have expressed concern about the future of intelligence sharing with the US following the re-election of Donald Trump.

Sir David Manning, who served as ambassador between 2003 and 2007, told a parliamentary committee some of Trump's appointees had "strange track records" which would create a "problem on the intelligence front".

Dame Karen Pierce, who only left the role last month, said intelligence sharing would continue "even if at the top level there might be things we might wish to be circumspect about".

Sir Nigel Sheinwald, ambassador from 2007 to 2012, said the relationship would be "trickier to handle than probably at any other time".

He said some of the people appointed by Trump to lead intelligence and security could "present some difficulties in terms of their view of us and views of co-operation".

He did not specify who he was referring to, however concern has been raised about the US president's pick to be his director of national intelligence.

Tulsi Gabbard has previously echoed Russia's justification for invading Ukraine and her appointment to the role was welcomed by Russian state media.

[...]

Sir Peter Westmacott, who was in Washington from 2012 to 2016, said problems might be caused by a changing culture in US government institutions adding that "a lot of very good people are being thrown out because they do not pass the [Trump] loyalty test."

[...]

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Florida's attorney general has directed investigators to issue search warrants and court summonses.

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A Banksy reimagining of a work by the late Scottish painter Jack Vettriano has sold at auction for £4.3m ($5.4m).

Crude Oil (Vettriano) was put up for sale by Blink 182 bassist Mark Hoppus, who acquired the painting in 2011.

It depicts the Fife-born artist's best known work, The Singing Butler, which features a couple dancing on a storm-swept beach accompanied by their butler and maid, but with two figures in yellow hazmat suits disposing of an oil drum in the background.

The sale to a private collector at Sotheby's in London on Tuesday evening came just days after Vettriano was found dead aged 73 at his apartment in France.

The work was initially projected to fetch between £3m and £5m in the sale.

The entirely hand-painted work, created using oil and spray paints, was first exhibited in 2005.

It was initially placed in a disused shop window in Notting Hill in full view of passers-by.

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A portion of the funds raised will go towards supporting the charities Children's Hospital Los Angeles, Cedars Sinai Haematology Oncology Research.

The couple will also donate some of the proceeds to the California Fire Foundation following the devastating wildfires which destroyed parts of the city earlier this year.

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Archive

Apple is stepping up its fight with the British government over a demand to create a “back door” in its most secure cloud storage systems, by filing a legal complaint that it hopes will overturn the order.

The iPhone maker has made its appeal to the Investigatory Powers Tribunal, an independent judicial body that examines complaints against the UK security services, according to people familiar with the matter.

The Silicon Valley company’s legal challenge is believed to be the first time that provisions in the 2016 Investigatory Powers Act allowing UK authorities to break encryption have been tested before the court. The Investigatory Powers Tribunal will consider whether the UK’s notice to Apple was lawful and, if not, could order it to be quashed.

The case could be heard as soon as this month, although it is unclear whether there will be any public disclosure of the hearing. The government is likely to argue the case should be restricted on national security grounds.

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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/30367666

The UK data watchdog has launched what it calls a "major investigation" into TikTok's use of children's personal information.

The Information Commissioner's Office (ICO) will inspect the way in which the social media platform uses the data of 13 to 17-year-olds to recommend further content to them.

John Edwards, the Information Commissioner, said it would look at whether TikTok's data collection practices could lead to children experiencing harms, such as data being leaked or spending "more time than is healthy" on the platform.

TikTok told the BBC its recommender systems operated under "strict and comprehensive measures that protect the privacy and safety of teens".

It added that the platform also has "robust restrictions on the content allowed in teens' feeds".

Mr Edwards said TikTok's algorithm "feeds" on personal data gleaned from user profiles, preferences, links clicked and how long they spend watching a particular video - making it subject to UK rules.

In addition to the probe into TikTok, the ICO is also checking the age verification processes of Reddit and Imgur, an image-sharing platform.

The investigation will look into whether the companies are complying with both the UK's data protection laws, and the children's code.

The code is set to design principles for online platforms aimed at protecting children in the UK. Platforms which collect UK children's user data must minimise the amount they gather and take extra care when processing it.

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